Sunday 19 August 2018

The Show Must Go On

The Royal British Legion Horticultural Show, co-hosted by HAHA, was yesterday. It's a small-ish show, but still a busy time. We were pleased to hear that there were 23 exhibitors showing over 70 exhibits.
Last week Jamie had selected our best potatoes, we didn't want to pull all the plants up, though we have cut the haulms down now. Orla were selected for the whites and Kestrel for the coloured categories.

On Saturday morning we were trying to find five matching shallots from the good harvest of Longor that we got this year. We are very pleased at how they grew especially considering their early start which included getting frozen into the ground by the Beast from the East! Once found we tied them off with raffia - it's not too tricky to do and makes them look professional.
Then we met several other plotholders on site desperately trying to find items to include in the show. The trouble is the word 'matching'. This year much of our veg has grown in odd shapes, so to find two the same is a miracle 😃
That's not one of ours, but you can see the type of problems we plotholders had!

I basically picked twice as much as we needed in the hope that we could cover most categories. It did feel good walking away from the plot with a stacked trugful of veggies and a load more that wouldn't fit in the trug.

That's the first of our peppers that actually coloured all over

So after cleaning, snipping, trimming and selecting we had what we could enter and I took them up to the Legion Hall. Ted and Kerry were already there from Marsh Lane setting up their veg, flowers, baking and photo displays and lots of exhibits were already out on the tables. I put ours out and then went into Newbury to collect our judge for the horticultural sections.
Most of the time I sat outside while Jean was judging, but when the sun went in I sat at the back of the hall. I prefer not to hear the actual scoring but it's interesting watching her examining items and some of her little comments. After a couple of hours I took Jean home and I went home for a bit of grub and a rest before the evening's entertainment.
Auctioning of the exhibits is fun with Jim as the perfect host
We were pleased to see that we came 3rd in the Horticultural section - just 3 points of winning the RHS Banksian medal - well, there's always next year! Here are most of our entries which were placed.
And here's me as HAHA rep waiting to present the medal to this year's winner.
So pleased that our plot-neighbour came first, but he couldn't win the medal as he won last year and our friend Kerry won the most points across the whole show - her baking, crochet and photography were champions!
Overall it was a fun, but tiring day. Then today we had our plotholder bbq at Marsh Lane - a much more casual affair than the Open Day but I had to be the veggie-burger chef so couldn't join in the fun as much as I wanted to - well, at least until we ran out of veggie food. We had a great crowd on the hot sunny afternoon.
Such a lovely bunch!
And the tallest sunflower prize went to Roger {over 2m}- who wasn't there! He will get his prize though, £30 donated by our local Wyevale Garden Centre :-)
So the song, as suggested by Jacquie is, of course, by Queen.

8 comments:

  1. Oh, that looks like lots of fun, the contest as well as the bbq. Great job with your placement on your entries, those are very good looking vegetables. It seems like you have a close knit group of plotholders. Most of my friends who garden do it on a large scale with tractors or they're market growers, so we don't get to chat about gardening much since they're so busy during the growing season.

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    1. It was a great weekend and so nice to sit down and have a proper chat about veggies (and the world in general!)

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  2. The show looks good fun. Well done for coming 3rd but fingers crossed for the medal next year.
    You were lucky to have sun for your bar b. We had rain

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    1. It was fun! There is still a distinct lack of rain around here!

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  3. It would have been embarrassing presenting the medal to yourself wouldn't it?

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  4. I've just discovered your fab blog and thrilled that you are at Hungerford! Before coming to France, we lived at Froxfield, so I know the area well, although I don't think there were allotments when we lived there. Love to see your plot, very abundant! I have a veggie plot at home here - a potager, as the French call it, but really, I run it on British lines - my French neighbour thinks I'm quite mad!

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    1. Ah! Welcome back to the area through my blog 😀
      The Marsh Lane site has only been here 9 years, but really feels central to the community now (perhaps I'm biased).
      Our best gardener on site (83 year old, Ivan) is from Froxfield.
      I look forward to seeing some veggie photos on your blog, which I'm now following

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Belinda